http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/26/AR2010032602048_pf.htmlthis is bad.
3/26/2010 11:35:57 AM
ruh-ROH!
3/26/2010 11:46:43 AM
Pretty bad but nothing new. These sorts of incidents happen every now and then particularly during tense moments in the relationship. Just a few years back, there was a large naval battle resulting in the deaths of 17 NK and 5 SK sailors as well as the sinking of a NK gunboat.Still, I am surprised by the size of the vessel and am wondering what class it is. Seems too small to be a frigate, but for that many sailors to be involved, it must be larger than a typical patrol boat. Sounds kind of like the North Koreans got in a lucky shot.Also, compared to the bad old days (commando assaults on the presidential palace, blowing up airliners, axe murdering GI's) this is small fries.
3/26/2010 11:55:39 AM
3/26/2010 2:28:01 PM
3/26/2010 5:16:42 PM
Yeah that last one sounds like bs I'd believe the other ones though.
3/29/2010 4:37:28 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/03/28/skorea.sailors/index.html?hpt=T2
3/29/2010 5:41:59 AM
I'm still counting down the days until Chairman Obama apologizes to the kind and gentle North Koreans for the sinking of the SK ship.
3/29/2010 8:08:20 AM
Speaking of some of those incidents back in the day ... I was in SK for almost 2 years doing missionary service. One of the churches I worked at was located just north west of the presidential residence. My leader there had been a missionary in that area back in the day, and that same church building had the missionary homes right beside it at that time, so he was living there. Its sort of up on the mountain side that the palace has as a backdrop.Well, one morning he woke up and heard some gunshots. Sure enough, there was a NK guerrilla up in the hills beside the churches property. They looked out the window to see a large group of soldiers arresting the NK soldier. Apparently they had been looking for him all night after an attempted break-in/assassination attempt on the president. He had been hiding in the wooded areas along the mountainside.Pretty crazy shit
3/29/2010 12:01:56 PM
^ Sounds like the 1968 attack on the Blue House. The one NK soldier captured confessed that they had direct orders to behead the president. Later he became a christian ministers in South Korea; also his entire family was executed because he blabbed about it.
5/18/2010 3:30:25 PM
If China tolerates a North Korea that does test detonations of nuclear weapons in violation of the NPT despite China and just about every other country in the region telling them not to, then sinking a warship isn't much else.China knows that the South Koreans aren't going to do anything militarily to North Korea. So as long as North Korea doesn't directly attack China, they'll continue to prop them up as a buffer state. Besides, the North is more a thorn in the side of its American rival and her allies (Japan, South Korea).
5/19/2010 4:46:55 PM
5/19/2010 10:05:56 PM
They were nice enough to play the game near the doorway so they could watch while they wash up. What more do you want?
5/19/2010 10:13:32 PM
5/20/2010 11:57:15 AM
Probably this guy:
5/20/2010 2:50:44 PM
^ and he was using his stealth boat!
5/20/2010 3:01:12 PM
man i wish N. Korea would setup up a nuclear test in the northern part of their country and have it accidentally detonate before launch, ending their whole fucking regime
5/20/2010 3:33:32 PM
One of the theories out there is that whenever Kim Jong Il gets worried about a military coup he pulls some shit like this to unite his leadership in a crisis. The speculation now is that due to his poor health he's worried about being deposed before his son can take power.
5/20/2010 4:06:17 PM
Makes sense. He's essentially holding his own people hostage. Don't accept me as leader? I'll toss a match on the powder keg that will get us all killed. Now accepting me as leader doesn't look so bad, does it?
5/21/2010 7:56:23 AM
not a bad idea if you get down to it
5/21/2010 8:04:14 AM
Either creating a crisis or proving to his military officers that he's not about to capitulate to the South and can still do things with minimal retribution. This is a good example of it.
5/21/2010 3:50:52 PM
5/21/2010 4:04:04 PM
Looks like the South has severed the few, tattered remaining economic ties with the North.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/asia_pacific/10144059.stm
5/24/2010 12:00:04 AM
Weaksauce.It's sad how afraid South Korea is. North Korea sinks one of their battleships, killing 46, and they demand an apology. Way to be tough on terrorism.I get that there are thousands of missiles pointed at Seoul. I understand that Kim Jong Il is unhinged and ready for war. But it's just pathetic the way they try to appease this guy over and over again (sunshine policy anyone?) when he pulls shit like this on a regular basis.
5/24/2010 12:31:31 AM
NPR was saying that this ship incident was a ploy in order to ensure his youngest son's succession to power, although they were a bit cagey on exactly how the two were related.
5/24/2010 12:39:02 AM
SK woudl end up being overrun if they went to war. NOt saying they woudlnt eventually push them back, but right not the NK have way to many peopel just waiting to pour over the border.
5/24/2010 11:36:59 AM
5/24/2010 7:22:37 PM
5/24/2010 7:58:05 PM
OK, Mr. Joshua, let me be clear: North Korea is run by a bunch of bastards and I'd like nothing better than to see them swing from the tallest trees the peninsula could provide.HOWEVER...Despite your (frankly scant) anecdotes from the South, I can see why the government there isn't eager to risk potentially millions of lives in order to unite what is, at best, a vast and cheap labor pool from the North with a currently thriving market in the South.My assumption would be that South Koreans who need work would not be any more happy about NK laborers coming in and taking jobs than are, say, Americans about Mexicans who do the same thing. We've seen how well THAT has worked out, and that's when we have a (theoretical) border.There is a world of difference between a facility created to exploit cheap labor and sudden, universal access to an enormous amount of cheap labor. It's why you hear relatively little bitching about manufacturing going to Mexico. but you hear incessant bitching about Mexican laborers coming up here.
5/25/2010 3:48:34 AM
I'm not arguing with that. I'm just saying that there's at least some plus side to it that I didn't consider.I'm sure that it would be pretty shitty on the short term and I'm sure that the feeling of S Koreans towards northerners would be even more severe than the disparity between ossies and wessies in Germany.
5/25/2010 3:57:07 AM
I work with a few Koreans and they just don't seem to care honestly. They've pretty much told me that both countries have missiles pointed at each other and if they went to war they would destroy each other. end of story. There would be no north and no south. They seem to think they will never go to war again because of the weapons we have today would just abolish both countries.
5/25/2010 9:47:16 AM
5/26/2010 3:59:47 PM
Firing weapons across country boundaries at military equipment doesn't seem like the worst reason to react aggressively.
5/26/2010 4:08:44 PM
True, but after saying that they won't pursue military action after the sinking of a ship and the deaths of 46 sailors, it's surprising that they're threatening war if the Kim Jong Il fucks with their stereo.
5/26/2010 4:13:41 PM
Threatening to counter doesn't equate to a full scale war; there are other means of pushing back. Another anecdote, but when my father served on the DMZ, there were two instances when North Korean soldiers sneaked across and slit the throats of a few ROK infantry. The general was so pissed he sent a few commando teams across the DMZ to take a few trophies in retaliation.Seriously though, South Korea isn't going to start a war over the North popping a few of their speakers. There are other, nonviolent things they can do such as countering with other propaganda tools.[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 4:33 PM. Reason : spellin']
5/26/2010 4:33:45 PM
But even without resorting to war, the question is how much can the ROK do before it is so humiliating to the Dear Leader that he has to escalate just to save face with his own people?My thought is that he can withstand limited propaganda before he either has to back down or step things up.
5/27/2010 1:06:17 AM
What would China do in an all out war??Would they actually eat the huge economic toxic pill war with the west would cause just to save their ideological little brother down south??
5/28/2010 2:51:53 PM
That's an interesting question, but the North always has a few options as well before having to go to all out war. They can always detonate another nuclear device, launch a few missiles over Japan, etc. I assume the Dear Leader is a rational actor: his sole goal is to ensure the stability of his regime and pave the road for a smooth succession. War with the South is a practice in self annihilation. There is of course the question of whether he can still fully control the military however.As for China, they could care less about the regime itself. However, seeing columns of US-ROK forces marching right up to their border will probably make them, particularly their military, a bit antsy. I'm not sure what they'd actually do, but I know they'll do everything in their power to prevent both war from breaking out or the North Korean regime from collapsing.
5/28/2010 4:27:45 PM
Dear leader is supposed to be in poor health. Different factions are jockeying for power
5/29/2010 12:11:06 PM
5/29/2010 12:14:56 PM
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/opinon/2010/06/137_66986.htmlA critique of the ROK government's handling of the situation by Andrei Lankov, one of the most prominent scholars on North-South relations.
6/4/2010 11:20:19 AM
7/12/2010 7:06:29 PM
We're buggin' out!
7/12/2010 7:12:16 PM
http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100708/full/news.2010.343.html
7/16/2010 9:47:51 PM
While there are still some who'll nit pick at the molecular level, nearly all the evidence clearly points to a torpedo attack. The international investigation confirms this, and perhaps the only nations who investigated that would be neutral on this issue such as Sweden and Canada were forced by the weight of the evidence to agree with it. If you go from an opposite direction and do a process of elimination, the evidence removes pretty much every other possibility from a collision to an old mine. Also, no other nation had any real benefit or motivation to take such an extreme action.One Washington insider, Chris Nelson who is a self professed liberal Democrat, speculates that people keep clinging to these sorts of stories, these 1% probabilities, because for them to accept the truth that the North Koreans deliberately attack and sunk the vessel has such serious implications that NGO's, particularly those who had promoted open engagement or humanitarian cooperation with the North, would be forced to completely reevaluate their positions and reshape their paradigms if they ever acknowledged that the North did such a thing. One either has to accept that North Korea did this deliberately, returning the peninsula to the "bad old days" of the Cold War, or even scarier, the North is no longer able to fully control its military.
7/18/2010 2:59:44 PM
Well it wouldn't be the first time that liberals stuck their heads in the sand when confronted by reality.
7/18/2010 3:38:22 PM
7/20/2010 12:38:49 AM
Same thing has happened many, many times before.For chrissakes, the ship was stationed in Japan. Why do you bloody well think we had it over there?We'll do our little dance, as well we should, to remind everyone we have the biggest swinging dicks in the region.
7/20/2010 1:49:00 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/11/23/nkorea.skorea.military.fire/index.html?hpt=T1&iref=BN1
11/23/2010 6:19:20 AM